HomeNewsOpinionWho will protect the privacy of retail customers?

Who will protect the privacy of retail customers?

While the Reserve Bank of India is working hard to ensure that privacy is maintained for large borrowers, as retail customers we are equally entitled to as much secrecy of our information

September 06, 2024 / 08:21 IST
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Depositors paid the price in the form of low interest rates because banks weren’t earning much to pay them well.

It’s now nearly a decade old battle with the Reserve Bank of India and banks on one side and a bunch of commoners like us on the other side. The reference here is a public interest litigation, which is going on against the RBI and banks, filed in 2015 where the petitioner is questioning why banks should not reveal the names of the top borrowers. This is a valid ask because as depositors we should have the right to know at least the top 20 borrowers by name and exposure of every bank. The context of this litigation is the asset quality issues that marred banks between 2014 and 2019. The incident indirectly had a huge implication on depositors.

Backstopped by deposits

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Depositors had to pay a price in the form of low interest rates because banks weren’t earning much to pay them well. In fact, most of them especially those in the public sector were in the red because of the asset quality issues. Given that Indian banks are built on deposits unlike how banks in the western world work, the question raised in this PIL is valid.

Deposits account for 70 – 80 percent of a bank’s liability, which in turn gives them the strength to lend. Yet, the RBI and banks don’t want to share this data to people like us and take shelter under the secrecy rules which protect the identity of borrowers. The problem here is that the secrecy rules are also one-sided. While large corporate borrowers are being sheltered by their right to privacy, but what about common people like us?